90 Kan. 395 | Kan. | 1913
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The Olathe Milling & Elevator Company, a corporation, borrowed two thousand dollars of C. L. Hayes for use in its' business, and gave him a note therefor, signed by the corporation and by three individuals, who were the principal stockholders, and were also directors of the corporation, but who other
The principal contention in behalf of the defendants is that they were discharged from liability by an extension of time given by the bank to the milling company for a valuable consideration without their consent. After the maturity of the note referred to the milling company executed to the cashier, for the benefit of the bank, a negotiable note for $12,700-due in ninety days, on account of various items of indebtedness, including the $2000. The defendants did not sign this note, and did not consent to it. The old note was not surrendered, and the new note was not entered on the books of the bank, but was placed in an envelope containing notes that had been charged off. As security for the same indebtedness the milling company also executed a mortgage, which was afterwards held void as to creditors.
The defendants maintain that the transaction re-, ferred to amounted to a payment1 of the $2000 note. The decision of the trial court implies a finding that the new note was not accepted as payment of the old, and this finding was warranted, if not compelled, by the evidence.
The plaintiff challenges the authority of the cashier to bind the bank by the acceptance of the new note. Such authority was not shown, unless it is to be regarded as incidental to the office. It has been held that a cashier has no implied authority to extend the time of payment of a note where the effect would be to release a surety. (Bank v. Wetzel, 58 W. Va. 1, 50 S. E. 886; Vanderford v. Farmers’ Bank, 105 Md. 164, 66
If there were anything in the conduct of the parties from which an inference might be drawn that they did or did not intend an extension of the time of payment of the original debt, the question would be one of fact, upon which the decision of the trial court would be final. But we think there was no substantial evidence on the subject, beyond the bare fact of the making and acceptance of the later note, and in the absence of anything to indicate the contrary, by the weight of authority the presumption is that action on the first note .was to be suspended until the maturity of the second. (7 Cyc. 891, 892; Note, 4 A. & E. Ann. Cas. 884.)
The defendants were clearly sureties in the sense that if they had paid the $2000 note they would have been entitled to reimbursement from the corporation. It is agreed that the bank when it . bought the note knew that the defendants claimed to be sureties, and it must be deemed to have known of their actual relation to the transaction.
If the matter were ruled by the present statute relating to negotiable instruments no extension of time given to the corporation would release the other signers of the note. That statute provides that one who by the terms of an instrument is absolutely required to pay it is “primarily liable.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 5249.) It enumerates the methods by which one who is secondarily liable may be released, one of them being by an extension of time to the principal. (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 5373.) It also enumerates the methods by which the
The plaintiff contends that the defendants were not released from liability, even if the milling company was given a valid extension of time, for the reason that they were not entitled to the privileges of mere volunteer sureties in this respect, because, being themselves the principal stockholders, they had a personal interest in the making of the loan to the corporation. In Seymour D. Thompson’s article on Corporations in the Cyclopedia of Law and Procedure it is said: “As the promise of a shareholder to pay the debt of a corporation is the promise to pay the debt of another, -it entitles the promisor to all the rights and remedies of a surety as to extensions and renewals of credits not authorized by him. (10 Cyc. 651.) Only one case is cited in support of the proposition. (Home Nat. Bank v. Estate of Waterman, 134 Ill. 461, 29 N. E. 503.) There the ground of the ruling is stated to be that a corporation is a different person from any of its members. The particular question now suggested was not discussed. In Pelton v. San Jacinto Lumber Co., 113 Cal. 21, 45 Pac. 12, action was brought upon a note signed by a corporation and indorsed by two stockholders. The indorsers
“That the alteration of the note was material, and such as would discharge sureties, whether indorsers or guarantors, is unquestionable. .' . . These propositions, as general rules, are not controverted by counsel for respondent, but they contend that by reason of the circumstances that Caswell and Fuller were stockholders of the corporation defendant, and, by virtue of that relation, would be indirectly and incidentally benefited by the loan, they are not entitled to the favor accorded by law to uninterested sureties. But to this point they have cited no authority, and I have found none. Conceding that Caswell and Puller were indirectly benefited, the benefit could have been only in proportion to the stock owned by them at the time of the loan, and to that extent they were made personally liable by force of section 322 of the Civil Code, independently of- any contract. But they are not sued on their statutory liability. . . . They are sued on an alleged contract which, according to the findings of fact, they never executed.” (pp. 24, 25.)
Under the circumstances stated the stockholders would not have been liable even if they had been principals, as no question peculiar to suretyship was involved.
In Bank v. Prescott, 60 Kan. 490, 57 Pac. 121, it was said, referring to a claim that the statutory liability of stockholders for a debt of the corporation had been released by an extension of time given to the company: “We are not satisfied that the. stockholders stand in such relation to the corporation as to entitle them to that favor and strict construction of their contracts which is accorded to sureties.” (p. 497.)
In Richardson v. Draper et al., 87 N. Y. 337, the administrator of one of several stockholders who had jointly guaranteed the payment of bonds of the corporation defended an action on the guaranty by in-
“It is a well settled principle that, in case of a joint obligation, if one of the obligors die, his representatives are, at law, discharged, and the survivor alone can be sued. ... It seems to be equally well settled that if the joint obligor, so dying, be a surety, not liable for the debt, irrespective of the joint obligation, his estate is absolutely discharged, both at law and in equity; the survivor only being liable. In such case, where the surety owed no debt outside and irrespective of the joint obligation, the contract is the measure and the limit of his obligation. He signs a joint contract and incurs a joint liability, and no other. Dying prior to his comaker, the liability all attaches to the survivor.” (p. 388.)
The rule was conceded to be as so stated, but was held to be inapplicable, because the guarantors, as owners of the stock in the corporation, were interested in the loan made to the corporation. In the opinion it was said:
“In guaranteeing the bonds the obligors did not act as mere sureties; they were seeking a benefit for themselves in promoting an enterprise in which they were largely interested. Whatever would benefit the company would benefit them. They were acting to put profits in their own pockets.” (Richardson v. Draper et al., 87 N. Y. 337, 347.)
The case is in point upon the proposition that one who, to facilitate the raising of money by a corporation of which he is a stockholder, guarantees the payment of the loan, is not entitled to that extreme liberality of treatment which is accorded a volunteer surety. The rule by which an extension of time to the principal operates to discharge a surety is almost as technical' as that by which the estate of a surety who is one of several joint obligors was. held to be relieved of liability by his death. It is true that such extension for the time being prevents the surety from paying the debt and .at once proceeding against the principal, and to that ex
In Guaranty Co. v. Pressed Brick Co., 191 U. S. 416, a surety company bond was given to insure the payment of laborers and materialmen by a contractor engaged in the erection of a public building. Action was brought on the bond on account of the failure of the contractor to pay for some brick furnished him. The surety company defended on the ground that without its consent the brick company had given the contractor an extension of the time of payment, taking his notes due in thirty and sixty days. Against this contention the argument was advanced that á surety who receives compensation for his risk is not released by an extension of time, to his principal, unless he suffers injury therefrom. The proposition was thus stated:
“Counsel for the brick company argued with much persuasiveness that this rule of strictissimi juris, though universally accepted as applicable to the'undertaking of an ordinary guarantor, who is usually moved to lend his signature by motives of friendship or expectation of reciprocity, and without pecuniary consideration, has no application to the guaranty companies, recently created, which undertake, upon the payment of a stipulated compensation, and as a strictly business enterprise, to indemnify or insure the obligee in the bond against any failure of the obligor to perform his contract.” (p. 423.)
The court refused to express any opinion on this question. The surety company was held liable upon the ground that the credit given to the contractor was only such as was customary and could fairly have been
“The rule strietissimi juris is a stringent one, and is liable at times to work a practical injustice. It is one which ought not to be extended to contracts not within the reason of the rule, particularly when the bond is underwritten by a corporation, which has undertaken for a profit to insure, the obligee against a failure of performance on the part of the principal obligor.” (p. 426.)
In United States v. United States Fidelity & G. Co., 178 Fed. 721, a number of federal cases were reviewed and a conclusion was reached which is fairly indicated by a headnote in these words:
“The rule of strietissimi juris, ordinarily applied in relief of an individual voluntary surety, is inapplicable to relieve a paid surety on a contractor’s bond because of an extension of time to the principal; but such surety must show, in addition, actual injury.” (¶ 2.)
Substantially this view has been taken by the circuit courts of appeals for the third and fourth circuits. (United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States, 178 Fed. 692, 102 C. C. A. 192; Atlantic Trust & Deposit Co. v. Town of Laurinburg, 168 Fed. 690.)
One who after having executed a real-estate mortgage conveys the property to a grantee who assumes the payment of the debt may become entitled to the same treatment as a volunteer surety, although originally he was the principal. (Stove Works v. Caswell, 48 Kan. 689, 29 Pac. 1072; Fisher v. Spillman, 85 Kan. 552, 118 Pac. 65; Note, 4 L. R. A., n. s., 666.) That situation, however, grows out of the peculiar relationship of the parties. The mortgagee is not necessarily affected by the agreement between the mortgagor and the purchaser of the land, but if he elects to hold the latter personally he is required to treat his original debtor as a mere surety.
We acquiesce in the view that where a principal stockholder signs a note with the corporation, intend
The judgment is affirmed.